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  • 12
    Apr
    2013
    9:02pm, EDT

    Outrage after teacher assigns Nazi propaganda essay on why Jews were evil

    By Holly McKenna, Reuters

    ALBANY, New York - A New York state high school English teacher who asked students to imagine they were Nazis and give reasons why Jews were evil could be reprimanded or dismissed, a school district superintendent said on Friday.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    City School District of Albany Superintendent Marguerite Vanden Wyngaard apologized at a news conference and pledged officials would personally express regret to Albany High School students who were given the assignment and their families.

    "This assignment for some of our students at Albany High School was completely unacceptable. It displayed a level of insensitivity that we will not tolerate in our school community," Vanden Wyngaard said.


    "I'm deeply apologetic to all of our students, to all of our families and the entire community," she said, appearing with representatives of the Anti-Defamation League and the United Jewish Federation of Northeastern New York at the federation office in Albany.

    Vanden Wyngaard declined to name the teacher but said the teacher was removed from class and faced disciplinary action.

    "It can go anywhere from a letter of counsel, to a letter of reprimand, all the way through to termination. There is a broad spectrum," Vanden Wyngaard said.

    A letter would go out to all families in the school district, she said.

    Vanden Wyngaard first issued an apology through the Times Union on Thursday night after the newspaper reported the assignment on its website. She responded with "absolute horror" when a parent presented her with the assignment on Thursday.

    The teacher gave three classes of 10th-grade students a persuasive writing assignment as part of a class project to demonstrate how Nazis thought and showed their loyalty to the Third Reich before World War Two.

    "You need to pretend that I am a member of the government in Nazi Germany, and you are being challenged to consider that you are loyal to the Nazis by writing an essay convincing me that Jews are evil and the source of our problems," the assignment instructions said.

    One-third of the students refused to complete the task, which was assigned following a class review of Nazi propaganda, said Ron Lesko, a spokesman for the district.

    Students were asked for an introduction, a conclusion and a list of arguments and were advised, "Please remember your life (here in Nazi Germany in the 30s) depends on it!"

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    824 comments

    Jew here. This is as ridiculous as the uproar over the "Stomp on Jesus" assignment. Teachers are there to take students out of their comfort zone and force them to really think. Misguided political correctness is destroying what's left of our once great education system.

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  • 10
    Apr
    2013
    12:19pm, EDT

    Research finally shows that online education works — for sex, alcohol and health

    TeachAIDS

    Students at the Shirimatunda Primary School in Tanzania use a Swahili version of an online course about AIDS created by a company called TeachAIDS.

    By Anya Kamenetz, The Hechinger Report

    Asia Jackson likes to learn at the computer because she can work at her own pace, which is usually faster than her classmates’. Al-Tariq Linton says, “It’s one on one. If I have a question, instead of competing for the teacher’s attention, I can go back and read it on my own.” Wanda Williams says her favorite part of the online course she’s taking is the narrator of the videos it includes. “Rufus made it funny,” she says. “It was fun.”


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    As interest in online education rages, these 17- and 18-year-old students at Newark, N.J.’s West Side High are guinea pigs in a global experiment to answer a key but surprisingly elusive question: whether and when it actually works.

    Evidence is mixed about how well online courses teach core subjects such as science, math or reading, with a recent large-scale Columbia study showing disadvantages to online learning for community college students. (The study was done at Columbia’s Teachers College, which is also home to The Hechinger Report, producer of this story.) But new research shows that, in certain topics—as for these students in Newark — computer-based instruction is not only just as effective as the old-fashioned, in-person kind. It’s more effective.

    These topics include sex, drugs and health — subjects in which privacy, personal comfort and customized information are especially important, and embarrassment or cultural taboos can get in the way of classroom teaching.


    Simple video- and animation-based interactive courses in these disciplines turn out to be good ways of teaching subjects you may have giggled through in health class. And they’re increasingly being used all over the world with success now confirmed by peer-reviewed, controlled research. The results are important as online education continues to expand faster than its impact and effectiveness can be fully measured.

    “We’re seeing significant and large effects on attitudes, knowledge, and also behaviors” from online courses in nontraditional subjects, says Marco Gonzalez-Navarro, an assistant professor at the University of Toronto who coauthored one study of the subject.

    Sex in Colombia
    Gonzalez-Navarro, working with researchers at Yale and the University of Ottawa, found that Colombian students in an 11-week online course in safer sex created by Profamilia, part of the International Planned Parenthood Federation, knew more about safer sex practices than students who took the conventional, state-mandated health class. And their knowledge was put into practice. For every 68 students who took the online course instead of the traditional course, researchers estimated by reviewing students’ medical records and comparing them to those of peers who didn’t take the course, up to two sexually transmitted infections were prevented. The students were also 10 percentage points more likely than their counterparts to redeem vouchers for free condoms offered six months later.

    It’s not just that students often feel embarrassed to talk about sex in conventional classrooms, the researchers found. Teachers don’t like teaching about it, making them less effective — assuming they even broach the topic.

    “A lot of teachers are just not comfortable teaching these subjects,” says Gonzalez-Navarro. “The central education ministry might say you have to give this sex-ed course, but it’s not happening.”


    Follow @hechingerreport

    Another series of independent research studies has confirmed the effectiveness of online education about alcohol awareness in the United States. In the largest, the researchers found a short-term reduction in harmful behaviors related to drinking among college freshmen at 15 colleges who took an online course called AlcoholEdu. Similar studies at the University of West Florida and Villanova and Roger Williams found similar results.

    AlcoholEdu is produced by EverFi, a venture-funded startup backed by a group of high-profile Silicon Valley investors, including Amazon's Jeff Bezos, Google's Eric Schmidt and Twitter's Evan Williams. In addition to alcohol education, EverFi offers animation, video and game-based courses in sexual violence awareness, financial literacy and digital citizenship, reaching 69 of the nation's largest 100 school districts, and 33 percent of the nation's incoming freshmen.

    Five and a half million students have already completed EverFi courses, according to CEO Tom Davidson, each of which includes eight to 10 hours of instruction. Some are used as part of for-credit courses while others are woven into freshman orientation.

    “You can’t get your dorm key at NYU until you do our sexual violence prevention course,” says Davidson.

    The NIH-funded study of the company’s online alcohol-awareness course found that it was most effective when more freshmen took the class at the same time, suggesting that peer pressure plays a role — though the results had dissipated by the spring semester, meaning more follow-up was needed.

    Tackling cultural taboos
    Other ongoing research supports the use of online courses for sex education. Students in China, India and South Africa who completed an online sex-education program called TeachAIDS were 91 percent more knowledgeable about HIV than before they took the course, compared to an improvement of 73 percent for students who were taught the conventional, state-mandated curriculum.

    TeachAIDS became a nonprofit in 2009. It was founded by Piya Sorcar and her husband, Shuman Ghosemajumder, who had spent six years in high-level jobs at Google, along with several others. In her Stanford dissertation, Sorcar had examined the role of cultural taboos in dealing with issues of sexual and reproductive health in India.

    “Sex education has been banned in some states in India,” she says. “There have been incidents of teachers burning curricular material in the streets.” In Andhra Pradesh, a state with a population of 85 million, HIV-positive students have been expelled.

    Sorcar set out to create a curriculum for HIV/AIDS that would be both culturally acceptable and scientifically rigorous, and that would attack social stigmas by showing what AIDS is, how the virus is transmitted and how to protect against it.

    The TeachAIDS course combines a 20- to 25-minute animated video with interactive quizzes. So far, she said, it has been produced in 15 languages and used in 74 countries. For added appeal and to make it more relatable for young people, each country and region features likenesses of and voiceovers by local celebrities. In Botswana, the program stars a hip-hop artist named Scar, who hosts the TV show Idols East Africa; in India, it features Shabana Azmi, an award-winning Hindi actress.

    “Our culture doesn’t talk about love or what comes out of it,” says Tristha Ramamurthy, who uses the TeachAIDS curriculum with seventh- through 12th-graders in a network of private schools she oversees in Bangalore, India. “We have arranged marriages — we’re very caste-driven. Sex itself is very uncomfortable to talk about, and in school it’s not taught.”

    What makes the TeachAIDS material acceptable to her students, Ramamurthy says, is the use of culturally specific euphemisms. For example, a honeymoon suite and two lovebirds kissing suggests intercourse; images of a woman holding a baby stand in for childbirth.

    Digital downsides
    There are downsides to using online courses to cover health topics. Both the software and the hardware cost money, and funding is often a problem in schools worldwide. TeachAIDS’ video-based course has been projected on a wall in villages in Nepal and shown on outdoor screens in Rwanda in between World Cup soccer matches, which extends the program’s reach but sacrifices the advantages of interactivity and privacy. Even at West Side High in Newark, Everfi had to provide a version of the course loaded on a jump drive, because the school had problems with its Internet connection.

    EverFi licenses its material to colleges for a fee, but public schools like West Side High can get it free with the backing of corporate or local business underwriters, which have included the National Basketball Association and Capital One bank.  The sponsorships, which can include prizes and giveaways, are seen by some critics as an unwelcome intrusion of business into the classroom.

    Nor do any of these courses constitute a hands-off, digital-only solution. The learning effects are strongest in most cases when the programs are used as part of for-credit courses, with teachers in the room to guide and motivate students, and when students take the courses together. And companies like EverFi need to provide ongoing support and professional development for teachers.

    But the need for easy-to-use, compelling resources to cover topics that teenagers are not all that eager to discuss with adults is likely to grow, opening more markets to organizations such as EverFi and TeachAIDS.

    EverFi is already expanding its offerings. And TeachAIDS is being adopted as part of the official high-school curriculum in Karnataka, an Indian state with a population of 60 million, and the company plans to grow to 50 countries with 90 percent of the world’s HIV cases by 2018.

    “We see such a need for these ‘everything else’ areas outside the core curriculum,” Davidson says of the apparent effectiveness of using online education in this way, and continued research into it. “New mandates are coming down at the state level, and schools are having trouble getting their arms around them. This is a model that we're following with the development of all our courses:  develop, test, redevelop.”

    Related stories from The Hechinger Report

    • New online venture promises small classes and college credit
    • My first MOOC: Online class about how to create online classes failed miserably
    • Online testing is heading to New Jersey schools

     

     

     

     

    3 comments

    Sorry, Denver Who said that it does not work for Science and Maths? I am teaching Physics and effectively so. Recently WizIQ used its virtual classroom for blended classes for management studies effectively and was warded for it effort. Online Education will work for every field with required modi …

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    Explore related topics: schools, education, aids, online-learning, sex-education, hechinger-report
  • 29
    Mar
    2013
    6:04pm, EDT

    Former superintendent indicted in Atlanta school cheating scandal

    More than three years after a state investigation began into unexplained rises in student test scores, former Atlanta Public Schools superintendent Beverly Hall was indicted along with 34 others on racketeering charges. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    By Kate Brumback, The Associated Press

    A grand jury indicted a former superintendent and more than 30 other educators Friday in one of the nation's largest cheating scandals that rocked Atlanta's public schools.


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    The indictment named the former Superintendent Beverly Hall as well as several high-level administrators, principals and teachers. Hall faces charges including racketeering, false statements and theft. She retired just days before the 2011 probe was released, and has previously denied the allegations.

    A state investigation in 2011 found cheating by nearly 180 educators in 44 Atlanta schools. Educators gave answers to students or changed answers on tests after they were turned in, investigators said. Teachers who tried to report it faced retaliation, creating a culture of "fear and intimidation" in the district.

    The cheating came to light after The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported that some scores were statistically improbable.


    The criminal investigation lasted 21 months and the allegations dated back to 2005.

    Most of the 178 educators named in a special investigators' report resigned, retired, did not have their contracts renewed or appealed their dismissals and lost. Twenty-one educators have been reinstated and three await hearings to appeal their dismissals, said Atlanta Public Schools spokesman Stephen Alford.

    The tests were the key measure the state used to determine whether it met the federal No Child Left Behind law. Schools with good test scores get extra federal dollars to spend in the classroom or on teacher bonuses.

    Georgia last year was granted a waiver from the federal law, which allowed schools to count a host of measures in addition to standardized tests.

    State schools Superintendent John Barge said last year he believes the state's new accountability system will remove the pressure to cheat on standardized tests because it won't be the sole way the state determines student growth. The pressure was part of what some educators in Atlanta Public Schools blamed for their cheating.

    Alford, the schools spokesman, said the district was moving on from the scandal.

    "This is a legal matter between the individuals implicated and the Fulton County District Attorney's office, and we will allow the legal process to take its course," he said before the indictment was announced. "Our focus is on providing a quality education to all of our students and supporting the 6,000 employees who come to work each day and make sound decisions about educating our students."

    The Georgia Professional Standards Commission is responsible for licensing teachers and has been going through the complaints against teachers, said commission executive secretary Kelly Henson.

    The commission considers cases as they are released from the district attorney's office. By Wednesday, they had received all but 26, Henson said.

    The commission waits for the district attorneys before taking action on those cases because there is likely evidence that will be useful for the commission's own investigation.

    "It is very routine for us to work with the DA's office and say we're not going to step on each other's toes and we'll work around their schedule," Henson said.

    It's common for educators to receive professional sanctions from the commission but not be charged, Henson said. The commission only requires a finding of guilt based on good evidence of wrongdoing, while criminal prosecutions require guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

    Of the 159 cases that the commission already reviewed, 44 resulted in license revocations, 100 got two-year suspensions and nine were suspended for less than two years, Henson said. No action was taken against six of the educators. 

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    51 comments

    All this under the watchful eye of former "superintendent of the year" - Dr. Beverly Hall. Here's more with the link. "She was taken to task for her car and driver, an Atlanta police officer on the school district payroll who made nearly $100,000 a year, including overtime. (“You can’t g …

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  • 25
    Mar
    2013
    7:36pm, EDT

    NJ governor Christie announces takeover of struggling Camden schools

    By Andrew Rafferty, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Saying it was time to "hit the reset button" on the Camden School District, New Jersey Governor Chris Christie on Monday announced a planned takeover of the 26 schools that rank among the state's worst performers in graduation and academic proficiency.  

    "Today we are taking the lead because for too long, the public school system in Camden has failed its children," Christie said at press conference on Monday.

    "The situation I believe is dire now and so far gone that we are at a breaking point."

    Camden schools graduation rate was below 50 percent in 2012, 37 points below the state average, according to statistics released by the governor's office.

    The schools also drastically under performed against the state average in standardized testing in math and English. An evaluation by the state Department of Education ultimately led Christie, a Republican, to the conclusion that the school district could not fix its deep-rooted problems without help from the state.

    "I believe that there are so many people in Camden who will look at this as an opportunity to hit the reset button. To restart and put aside some of the failings of the past," said Christie. 

    Camden will become the fourth school district to fall under New Jersey control, but the first to be taken over during Christie's administration. The last time the state took control of a New Jersey school district was 1995.

    The governor said he did not make the decision lightly, having waited more than three years to see if school performance would improve.


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    Christie was joined by New Jersey Education Education Commissioner Chris Cerf and local leaders during his announcement held in a library of Camden high school. The governor thanked local educators, parents and community leaders for their cooperation, while pledging to work with them through the implementation of proposal.

    If the takeover is approved, a state-appointed superintendent and leadership team would take control of the district after a nationwide search. The state government would also have oversight of teacher selection, classroom curriculum, school books and resources.

    Christie said it will likely take until next school year for the program to be fully implemented.

    The governor's office did, however, also announce immediate actions to be taken, which includes dispatching a transitional leadership team that will begin a review of district practices. 

    Camden, which sits across the Delaware River from Philadelphia, has long been plagued by a school system fraught with low test scores as well as poverty.

    "The problems are now incapable of fixing themselves and beyond the capacity of the current system to be able to do it on its own. So we do this today to try to change Camden," said Christie. 

    159 comments

    Sounds like it should have been done a long, long time ago. A below 50 percent graduation rate in 2012, that neglect didn't happen over night. It is truly a shame what our school systems have become. A lot of them are nothing more than a free babysitter.

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  • 21
    Mar
    2013
    6:54pm, EDT

    Chicago closing 54 schools in face of $1 billion deficit

    In Chicago, 30,000 kids will be moved to different schools: most of them black, on the city's South and West sides. And Chicago's not the only city where budget problems are forcing big changes in the public schools. NBC's Rehema Ellis reports.

    By M. Alex Johnson, staff writer, NBC News

    Crushed by a $1 billion education budget deficit, Chicago is closing 54 public schools, school district officials announced Thursday.

    The official list of closings isn't due to be published until March 31, but parents were learning whether their schools were on the list in letters that were already being sent home with students.


    The school district's chief executive, Barbara Byrd-Bennett, said the district is 20 percent under capacity — almost 100,000 students —  leaving many schools half-empty. The district will save $500 million to $800 million for each school that is closed, she has said in community forums and news interviews leading up to Thursday's announcement.

    "We've got at least two decades of decay, of children not being able to receive the kind of education that they should," Byrd-Bennett told NBC 5 of Chicago.

    Karen Lewis, president of the Chicago Teachers Union, which has been protesting the coming cuts for weeks, said the closings would mean "utter chaos."

    "This city cannot destroy that many schools," Lewis said in a statement. "These actions will put our students' safety and academics at risk and will further destabilize our neighborhoods."

    Lewis blamed Mayor Rahm Emanuel for the schools' disarray, calling him "the murder mayor."


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    "He is murdering public services (and) murdering our ability to maintain public sector jobs, and now he has set his sights on our public schools," she said.

    "But we have news for him: We don't intend to die. This is not Detroit."

    The union has scheduled a citywide save-the-schools rally for Wednesday.

    Emanuel said in a statement that Chicago couldn't afford to put off difficult decisions any longer.

    "By consolidating these schools, CPS can focus on safely getting every child into a better performing school. Like school systems in New York and Philadelphia where schools are being closed, Chicago must make tough choices," he said. "Our children's futures are bright and consolidating schools is the best way to make sure all of our city's students get the resources they need to learn and succeed."

    Follow M. Alex Johnson on Twitter and Facebook.

    Watch the top videos on NBCNews.com

    320 comments

    Does any fn democrat understand basic economics?!?!?!? These grossly overpaid, under-worked, self-entitled public Unions are just killing this country!!!!!! Why the f can't you fools see that?!?!?!

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  • 19
    Mar
    2013
    3:16pm, EDT

    Maryland school district restricts hugs, party invitations and cupcakes

    By Erin McClam, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A county in Maryland is putting limits on some of the trappings of elementary school: Hugs from grown-ups are restricted, birthday-party invitations are banned, and no more bringing cupcakes for the whole class.


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    Parents who visit the 17 elementary schools in St. Mary’s County are still allowed to hug their own children, just not other kids. Only parents registered as volunteers are allowed on the playground, and even then they can’t push other people’s kids on the swings.

    “What’s OK with some families is not OK with others,” Kelly Hall, the district’s executive director of elementary schools, told NBC News on Tuesday.

    The guidelines come from a committee of parents and school administrators that started meeting last fall. They were put in place after the massacre last December in Newtown, Conn. District officials stress that they are not final, and say they want feedback from parents.

    Among the new rules: It’s fine to send a homemade cupcake to school for your own child, but not for the rest of the class. District officials are concerned about food allergies and want parents to send only store-bought treats that have the ingredients listed.

    As for party invitations, the district suggests that PTA groups develop phone and email lists for parents.

    “If there are 20 individuals in the class and someone brings in seven birthday invitations, it was creating an academic disruption,” Hall said. “People were getting their feelings hurt.”

    Not everyone is happy with the restrictions. One member of the school board, Cathy Allen, told NBC Washington that they’re horrible.

    “The idea that you can’t go into a school and be hugged by a child, or go in (to) have lunch or be out on the playground and that you can only push the swing for your child and no one else” is unacceptable, she said.

    The school district, which has “Work Hard and Be Nice” as a motto, has about 8,000 elementary school students, Hall said. Sherry Whittles, the mother of one of them, told Southern Maryland Newspapers that the rules don’t go too far.

    Enforcing the hugging restriction could be tough, she acknowledged, because the child often approaches the grown-up for a hug, not the other way around.

    “It is sad that this needs to be done for the safety of our children,” she told the newspapers.

    Related: Girls can't wear tuxedos to prom, students told

    215 comments

    leave it to Maryland to do stupid better than anyone else, no touchy feely here, just lots of taxes.

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  • 14
    Mar
    2013
    3:07pm, EDT

    School forced daughter to sing patriotic songs, California man says

    View more videos at: http://nbcsandiego.com.

    By Erin McClam, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A Southern California man says his third-grade daughter was forced at school to sing “You’re a Grand Old Flag” and other patriotic songs that violate her beliefs as a Jehovah’s Witness.


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    The school says the girl hasn’t been forced to sing anything.

    Paul Salcedo, whose daughter attends Rosebank Elementary School in Chula Vista, says the principal, the teacher and the family had an agreement that the girl would not have to sing. He says the daughter was forced to anyway.

    Among the other songs to which Salcedo objects are “My Country ’Tis of Thee” and “This Land Is Your Land.”


    “That’s part of the religion, too,” he told NBC San Diego. “They don’t salute the flag. They don’t sing those types of songs. That’s their right.”

    Salcedo’s wife is also a Jehovah’s Witness.

    Jehovah’s Witnesses generally believe that saluting the flag or singing nationalistic songs amounts to an act of worship. Believers also refuse to participate in secular government.

    School administrators dispute Salcedo’s account. They say that the school district has offered options to parents who don’t want their children to participate, and that they have no plans to stop teaching the songs.

    “We don’t see these songs as being anything other than folk songs,” said Anthony Millican, a spokesman for the Chula Vista Elementary School District. “Having said that, we are sensitive to the needs of every student, and so we’re looking to find a reasonable solution.”

    A meeting planned for earlier this week among everyone involved was canceled because Salcedo wanted to record it, NBC San Diego reported.

    209 comments

    Two words - Home School. This way you can control everything your child does.

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  • 9
    Mar
    2013
    6:09am, EST

    South Dakota school districts can now give guns to teachers

    By David Beasley and David Bailey, Reuters

    South Dakota school districts could arm teachers under a bill introduced after the Connecticut school shooting rampage and signed into law on Friday.

    The bill came a day after Georgia lawmakers advanced legislation to end a ban on firearms in bars, churches and college classrooms.

    The "school sentinels" law signed by South Dakota Governor Dennis Daugaard, a Republican, allows the state's 152 school districts to decide whether they want to arm teachers, other employees, hired security guards or volunteers.

    School boards must get approval for their program from local law enforcement officials, and sentinels would have to pass a training program to carry weapons in the schools. District residents could put the issue to a voter referendum.

    The law in South Dakota and the proposal in Georgia are two moves by state legislatures that aim to expand gun rights at a time when other state and federal leaders consider new limits following the December killing of 26 children and adults at an elementary school in Connecticut.

    In Georgia, the Republican-led state House voted 117-56 on Thursday to advance the measure to restore gun carry rights that have been chipped away over the years, said one sponsor, state Representative John Meadows, a Republican.

    The Georgia legislation also would allow licensed gun owners to take weapons inside some unsecured government buildings where they are currently banned, starting on July 1. They would still be outlawed from college dormitories and sporting events, Meadows said on Friday.

    The bill does not specify or make any exemptions on the types of weapons and applies to all legal guns, Meadows said.

    Angry students with guns?
    Democratic state Representative Karla Drenner, who opposed the measure, said it was part of a backlash against a national push to strengthen gun control laws after the Connecticut killings.

    Drenner, an instructor at several colleges, said she was concerned about the impact on potential confrontations with angry students, recalling on Friday how a student once screamed at her for mispronouncing his name.

    "If he had a gun, the outcome could have been much different," Drenner said.

    Asked about Drenner's concerns, Meadows said, "She ought to be armed."

    The measure next moves to the Georgia state Senate for consideration. Meadows predicted it would pass, based on the response he said he had received from senators.

    Senate President Pro Tem David Shafer, a Republican, said in a statement on Friday the bill would be assigned to a Senate committee next week.

    "The Senate passed strong pro-Second Amendment legislation of its own, and I am confident that we will reach agreement with the House," Shafer said.

    Any measure advanced from the legislature would go to Republican Governor Nathan Deal for his signature.

    On Friday, Deal spokesman Brian Robinson said the governor agreed with language in the proposal that would make it harder for the mentally ill to obtain licenses to carry concealed weapons. He declined to say whether Deal supports other parts of the proposal.

    Related:

    Guns already allowed in schools with little restriction in many states

    Report: School employee accidentally shot during concealed weapons class

    After Newtown, states slow to embrace new gun laws

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    660 comments

    The govenor of South Dakota had better hope that no children are ever shot or he could be looking at all kinds of lawsuits. There are some teachers in the state that I would not trust with a pea shooter let alone with a gun.

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  • 4
    Mar
    2013
    1:32am, EST

    12-year-old boy who was victim of bullying attack dies after weeks in hospital

    By David Chang, NBCPhiladelphia

    Family photo

    Bailey O'Neill

    PHILADELPHIA -- A young boy who was the victim of bullying has died, according to his family. Bailey O'Neill, who turned 12 on Saturday, was in a coma after suffering several seizures. His family told NBC10's Katy Zachry that he died at the hospital on Sunday. 


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    Bailey's family says he was jumped by two classmates during recess at Darby Township School last January and suffered a concussion as well as a broken nose as a result.  He then began to suffer seizures the next day, forcing doctors to put him into a medically induced coma. Joy Fecanin, the boy's grandmother, told NBC10's Katy Zachry that he had to have a blood transfusion after getting pneumonia.

    On Sunday, the following message was posted on the Building Hope for Bailey Facebook Page:


    I would like to thank everyone who has prayed and supported Bailey and his family!! Bailey has been the strongest toughest boy I know. He has fought this battle long and hard. There just wasn't a way to fix this. I wish I could say he will get better but I can't. Bailey has gone to be with God today :( I love you Jina Risoldi with all my heart and I will help you through this. Bailey I love you!!! Please keep Baileys family in your prayers!!!

    While the students who jumped Bailey were suspended for two days, police have not yet revealed whether they will be criminally charged.

    “I would like to see these kids punished,” said Fecanin when she spoke to Zachry last month. “Something has to be done. I don’t know what’s taking them so long.”

    Read more at NBCPhiladelphia.com

    Delaware County District Attorney Jack Whelan says investigators are trying to determine if the injuries Bailey received in the fight caused his seizures. Investigators interviewed kids and recess aides who were on the playground when the fight broke out.

    “We can assure them that we are going to continue with our investigation,” said Whelan.

    Bailey’s younger brother was taken out of the school because his parents were worried that he'd also be the victim of bullying. 

    View more videos at: http://nbcphiladelphia.com.

    1575 comments

    OMG this truely breaks my heart! Children learn primarily from watching and interacting with others, while there could be some influancce from peers, children participating in acts such as these have no fear of punishment at all. This seems to be turning into an epidemic these days. My thoughts and  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: schools, crime, bullying, nbcphiladelphia
  • 28
    Feb
    2013
    9:29am, EST

    Report: School employee accidentally shot during concealed weapons class

    By Elizabeth Chuck, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A month after a Texas district voted to allow school employees to carry firearms on campus, a mechanical malfunction following a concealed handgun class has injured one of its workers, according to reports.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The employee from the Van Independent School District had stayed for one-on-one training after class with the concealed handgun license training instructor on Tuesday when a mechanical malfunction with his weapon caused his gun to misfire, NBC affiliate KETK reported. The bullet ricocheted, striking the employee in the left leg; his injury was not life-threatening, the affiliate said.

    After being treated at the scene, the employee was transferred to the nearby city of Tyler for treatment, according to KETK.

    ABC affiliate KLTV.com in East Texas reported that the man who was injured in Tuesday's incident was a maintenance worker at the school, and that he was in fair condition.

    Van Independent School District, located about an hour east of Dallas, decided on Jan. 23 to authorize certain school employees to carry concealed handguns on school property and school events, KETK reported. The decision came a week after another school district in the area, Union Grove, passed a similar measure.

    Per state law, school employees need to get a weapons license to carry a concealed handgun on school property.  KLTV reported Tuesday's incident was after a school-sponsored weapons class, but it was unclear whether it was held on school grounds.

    215 comments

    I would really like more detail on that "malfunction". While malfunctions do happen they are extremely, extremely rare.

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    Explore related topics: texas, schools, van, concealed-weapons, accidental-shooting
  • 5
    Feb
    2013
    4:26am, EST

    Pistol-packing pupils becoming an everyday occurrence

    WXIA / NBC via Reuters

    A 14-year-old pupil and a teacher were shot Thursday, Jan. 31, at Price Middle School in Atlanta. Another student at the school was arrested.

    By M. Alex Johnson, staff writer, NBC News

    The case of a Virginia second-grader caught with a gun on his school bus this week may be shocking but it's by no means uncommon.

    Across the country, children are being suspended or arrested for having weapons on campus or buses on a daily basis.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Police in Henrico, Va., were waiting at school for the little boy Monday morning after he allegedly threatened another pupil on their ride to Ratcliffe Elementary School. They found a handgun in his backpack, NBC station WWBT of Richmond, Va. reported.

    The incident made national headlines Monday, as did a similar incident when a loaded gun was found in a pupil's book bag last month at P.S. 215 in Queens, N.Y.


    However, these incidents aren't as isolated as they may appear. An NBC News survey of crime dockets and news reports across all 50 states reveals that, since Jan. 1, there have been at least 48 incidents in which guns have been discovered on students, in their bags or in their lockers.

    There were at least five last Thursday alone: in Atlanta; Augusta, Kan.; Chicago; Raleigh, N.C.; and Winston-Salem, N.C.

    There have been 23 class days since some districts resumed school Jan. 2 — not including Jan. 21, the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday. That works out to more than two gun reports a day this school year. (The survey excluded incidents in which pupils were caught with toy guns; all of the weapons were handguns, rifles, BB guns or air rifles.)

    And those are just the cases that have been made public: Juveniles' police records are generally protected, so an untold number of other such incidents are likely to have occurred.

    While it's impossible to determine whether such potentially deadly show-and-tells are happening more frequently, the public data do indicate just how hard it is to clamp down on guns on campus since the issue became a national concern in December in the wake of the fatal shootings of 20 pupils at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn.

    Most of the time, the weapons are brought along for protection or as items of curiosity, with the pupil more interested in showing off than in shooting. And usually, they're intercepted before anyone can get hurt, with the student's being suspended or charged for a weapons violation, depending on his or her age. Often, a parent or guardian is charged with failing to secure the weapon.

    But when they're not intercepted, tragedy is often the result.

    Last week, a 14-year-old boy was shot and wounded by a student at Price Middle School in Atlanta, police said.

    "Gun violence in and around our schools is simply unconscionable and must end," Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed said. "Too many young people are being harmed and too many families are suffering from unimaginable and unnecessary grief."

    And on Jan. 10, a student was wounded by a classmate who shot him at Taft Union High School in Taft, Calif., police said The boy targeted a second classmate but missed, authorities said.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    While many lawmakers have introduced legislation that would put armed police or security guards in schools, that may not be the answer, according to a state task force reviewing campus safety in Virginia.

    The task force last week stressed the need to fund anti-bullying programs and school resource officers, but it stopped short of calling for more officers in schools.

    "If we were to put 1,000 new police officers in our schools, those police officers would have to come from somewhere, and we might inadvertently make things less safe in our communities," Dewey G. Cornell, a law professor at the University of Virginia who's a member of the task force, told WWBT.

    The boy who opened fire last week in California was one of those who carried a weapon because he said he had been bullied, Kern County Sheriff Donny Youngblood said.

    But that's not a good enough excuse, parents say.

    "That just doesn't make sense," said Jeremy Massey, the parent of a student at Daly Elementary School in Inskter, Mich., near Detroit, where a third-grader was found to have taken a loaded gun to class two days in a row last month. The boy told police he carried the gun for his own protection.

    "If you are 10 years old, the only protection you need is to go tell an adult," Massey told NBC station WDIV of Detroit.

    Related:

    Full list of student gun incidents this year

    Obama on guns: 'We're not going to wait until the next Newtown'

    Guns already allowed in schools with little restriction in many states

    Watch US News crime videos on NBCNews.com

    1058 comments

    The problem is too many kids are picked on by the jocks for being different. Now it is not just he jocks who are the problem, but the gangs in schools. If we can't control our schools, then blame guns? Pretty stupid. We need to have dress codes and no smoking on school property. We must do whatever …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: schools, education, guns, crime, featured
  • 5
    Feb
    2013
    4:25am, EST

    Student gun incidents this year

    By NBC News

    Since Jan. 2, when some school districts returned to classes, there have been at least 48 incidents in which schoolchildren have been discovered with guns in their possession or in their lockers:

    Feb. 4
    • Ratcliffe Elementary School, Henrico, Va.

    • Coweta Intermediate High School, Coweta, Okla. — student killed

    Feb. 1
    • Palm Beach Lakes High School, West Palm Beach, Fla.


    Jan. 31
    • Price Middle School, Atlanta — student shot and wounded

    • Hendricks Elementary Community Academy, Chicago

    • Augusta High School, Augusta, Kan.

    • Carver High School, Winston-Salem, N.C.

    • Athens Drive High School, Raleigh, N.C.

    Jan. 30
    • Park Hill High School, Kansas City, Mo.

    Jan. 29
    • Hoxie High School, Hoxie, Ark.

    • Elizabethtown Middle School, Elizabethtown, N.C.

    • Brazos School for Inquiry and Creativity, Houston

    • Imagine Middle School, North Port, Fla.

    • Carson Elementary School, Cincinnati

    Jan. 28
    • Forest Hills High School, Marshville, N.C.

    Jan. 25
    • Harrison High School, Harrison, Mont.

    • Carson Middle School, Tucson, Ariz.

    Jan. 24
    • Hogan Preparatory Middle School, Kansas City, Mo.

    • Daly Elementary School, Inkster, Mich.

    Jan. 23
    • Willowridge High School, Houston

    Jan. 22
    • Educational Opportunity Center, Clarkston, Wash.

    Jan. 18
    • Northwest High School, Omaha, Neb.

    • Wheeler High School, Marietta, Ga.

    • Heights High School, Wichita, Kan.

    • Soehl Middle School, Linden, N.J.

    • South Philadelphia High School, Philadelphia

    Jan. 17
    • Baldwin County High School, Bay Minette, Ala.

    • Westover High School, Albany, Ga.

    • Pennfield Middle School, Hatfield, Pa.

    • PS 215, Queens, N.Y.

    Jan. 16
    • College Hill Middle School, Texarkana, Texas

    Jan. 15
    • Riverside Academy, Reserve, La.

    • Westwood High School, Blythewood, S.C.

    Jan. 14
    • Faith Academy School of Excellence, Norfolk, Va.

    • Bastrop High School, Bastrop, La.

    • El Dorado High School, El Dorado, Kan.

    Jan. 11
    • Glenn High School, Winston-Salem, N.C.

    • Bedford Middle School, Bedford, Ind.

    • Prairie High School, Battle Ground, Ore.

    • West Haven High School, West Haven, Conn.

    Jan. 10
    • Taft Union High School, Bakersfield, Calif. — student shot and wounded

    Jan. 9
    • John L. Marsh Elementary School, Chicago

    • Alba Middle School, Bayou La Batre, Ala.

    Jan. 8
    • Lyon Elementary School, Magnolia, Texas

    • Donovan Junior High School, Utica, N.Y.

    • Highland Springs High School, Highland Springs, Va.

    Jan. 7
    • Hermitage High School, Henrico, Va.

    Jan. 3
    • Shelburne Middle School, Staunton, Va.

    Related:

    Pistol packing pupils becoming an everyday occurrence

    19 comments

    Ban handguns.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: schools, guns, crime
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